Airport personnel have awfully tough jobs — baggage handlers especially. They work in extremely noisy and stressful environments, even setting weather aside. But in extreme heat, cold, rain, or wind, it must be gobsmackingly depressing — to the point that they don't care what happens to the property entrusted to them.

Karen Crouse contributed a story to the New York Times about the hazards of travel (international travel, especially) with golf clubs. At the top of the story, she recounted Gary Woodland's journey from Kansas City International Airport to the Open Championship in England earlier this month. At KCI, Woodland saw a baggage handler drop his golf bag right on the tarmac, then fling a suitcase on top of the bag. What is somewhat ironic is that in 2008, U.S. News & World Report actually ranked KCI the "third least miserable airport" among the 47 busiest in the U.S. Of course, when Woodland arrived at Manchester Airport after "an excruciatingly tight connection" in Chicago, Woodland's clubs and bags were nowhere to be found.

Woodland showed remarkable restraint when he said, "Seeing them throw the bags around and then them not showing up, it was definitely a little more stressful than it needed to be."

Perversely, 1989 Open Champion Mark Calcavecchia had the opposite problem when he tried to get to the 2014 Open from California.

If you have traveled by air, you know that lost and mis-routed luggage can seriously affect life at your destination, as well as destroy vacation plans. But as Crouse noted in her article, this airline industry report says that United States-based carriers have fewer mishandled pieces of baggage than their European counterparts do.

London Heathrow Airport has an especially poor reputation among pro golfers and their caddies. According to Crouse, Hunter Mahan's caddie, John Wood, has written off Heathrow as "the Bermuda Triangle for bags." In 2009, Mahan flew through Heathrow for the Open Championship at Turnberry, arriving on a Monday, but his bags failed to appear until late Wednesday. Because Ping had an equipment trailer at the Open, Mahan was able to have a set of clubs custom-made for him in time for the tournament. As it happened, Mahan still missed the cut.

This is precisely why Woodland flew through Manchester this year, instead of Heathrow — but he was still punished for his efforts.

Crouse also included the story of Henrik Stenson, who in July also flew to Heathrow from Copenhagen. Stenson's clubs made it, but astoundingly, they managed to lose his clothes bag.

"Heathrow's a dangerous place," according to the talented Swede, who also recommends avoiding Charles de Gaulle Airport outside Paris.

But we, the proverbial "proletariat" of the golf world, do not have that luxury. Aside from trusting a chosen air carrier, our only other options are renting clubs at the destination, or taking your clubs to services like FedEx and ShipSticks.com.

When your humble correspondent last traveled by air in September of 2012, my clubs and clothes made it successfully from Minneapolis to Chicago-Midway to Jackson and back. But you can image how unimpressed I was when I beheld an airline "Appearance Tech" truck at Midway that didn't have an attractive appearance of its own:

SkyGolf 360 members, please pipe in with your own experiences — good or bad.

ally1957 says:hi
doesn't involve golf equipment but luggage in general
but don't fly through salt lake city with delta lost luggage every time that four out of four
At least it's a perfect record

8/6/14

shubham says:Its so easy to connect Bluetooth in our window because now i give you some information about that no bluetooth windows 10 things and if you are capable to use this then come here and try this article.